It is the additive inverse of itself, it is the square, cube, ... any positive power of itself.
The number itself tells you the distance from zero. So the integer "15" is 15 units from zero. Same goes for the integer –15, just on the other side.
There are just three possible cases: Positive integer: positive x positive = positive. Negative integer: negative x negative = positive. Zero: zero x zero = zero.
The additive opposite is itself and its multiplicative opposite is not defined.
No, zero is an integer but it is neither a postiive nor a negative integer.
A positive integer is an integer to the right of zero on the number line. It is more then zero
Zero is a rational number and an integer.
A positive integer is an integer to the right of zero on the number line. It is more then zero
Zero is neither positive or negative.
Yes, because you can multiply 4 by an integer (namely zero), to get zero.Yes, because you can multiply 4 by an integer (namely zero), to get zero.Yes, because you can multiply 4 by an integer (namely zero), to get zero.Yes, because you can multiply 4 by an integer (namely zero), to get zero.
The sum of zero and a negative integer can never be zero - it will always be negative and nonzero. Although zero is also an integer, it is neither negative nor positive and cannot be the other integer used.
Any non-zero integer raised to the power of zero is equal to 1.
The sum of zero and any integer is never zero.And it's still 'integer', not 'interger'.